by Brett Rutherford
Eye-blinks,
brush-strokes,
things no sooner seen
than forgotten
unless
the words come,
or the brush speeds past
the drying of water
hastily, hastily
before it is gone —
Red light above,
black water below
horizon-sky.
Foreground of forest
some parts still lit,
some parts in silhouette —
Ravens on high,
arrowing about,
while in the hedge
one whippoorwill
stands still —
Gale-swept corn
tilts eastward,
sharp eyes peek red
in shrubbery
and under fallen
oak branches,
trees’ loss
their newfound
mansion —
The high grass moves.
The hare hides.
Snake closes
all-knowing eyes —
In twilit pines,
something is about,
hungry for flesh —
foxes bring down
a limping doe —
Bats swoop to scoop
the almost invisible
midge and gnat,
summer’s last harvest —
The spider laments
the coming snow,
web never big enough
to catch and keep
a full larder —
Moss, lichen,
mushroom, fern,
sleep, or die!
Rock shelter,
south-facing trunk,
warm rills
of water melting:
they will get by —
Maples, if you
could only hear them,
chatter with leaf and root:
“Frost coming!
Oh, what’s the use?”